Press Release

Contact: CDC National Center
for Health Statistics,
Office of Communication301-458-4800

Married Adults are the Healthiest, New CDC Report Shows

A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests
that married adults are healthier than divorced, widowed or never married
adults.

The report, Marital Status and Health: United States, 1999-2002, was
based on interviews with 127,545 adults aged 18 and over as part of the
National Health Interview Survey, conducted by CDCs National Center for
Health Statistics. The study looked at health status and limitations, health
conditions, and health-related behaviors according to marital status and also
by age, race/ethnicity and socioeconomic factors such as education and
poverty status.

Among the findings in the report:

Nearly 60 percent of adults are married, 10.4 percent are separated or
divorced, 6.6 percent are widowed, 19 percent are never married and 5.7
percent are living with a partner. Marital status varies greatly among
race/ethnic groups: approximately 61 percent of white adults, 58 percent of
Hispanic adults, and 38 percent of black adults are married, according to
the survey.

Married adults are less likely than other adults to be in fair or poor
health, and are less likely to suffer from health conditions such as
headaches and serious psychological distress.

Married adults are less likely to be limited in various activities,
including work and other activities of daily living.

Married adults are less likely to smoke, drink heavily or be physically
inactive. However, married men are more likely to be overweight or obese
than other men.

Adults who live in cohabiting relationships are more likely to have
health problems than married adults and more closely resemble divorced and
separated adults.

The association between marital status and health is most striking in
the youngest age group although it persists throughout the age groups
studied.

While the results show that married adults are generally in better health
than unmarried adults, the reasons for better health status among married
adults cannot be determined with the cross-sectional data collected in the
National Health Interview Survey.

The report, Marital Status and Health: United States, 1999-2002, is
available at the CDC/NCHS web site at
www.cdc.gov/nchs/.